Mason Jennings

Singer/songwriter Mason Jennings blends the personal insights of a poet, the political broadsides of a protest singer, and the broad musical eclecticism of a jazz musician with a rock & roller's passion. The result made him one of the most talked-about new artists on the acoustic music scene and earned him a loyal cult following, as he moved over 30,000 copies of his first two albums and sold out shows around the country without the benefit of a major-label publicity department.

Jennings was born in 1975 in Honolulu, Hawaii, but moved to Pittsburgh with his family shortly after. While still a young boy, his father moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota and sent his son a series of tapes featuring bands that were storming the then-fertile Twin Cities music scene. Inspired, Jennings picked up a guitar and starting writing songs by the age of 13. Three years later, Jennings decided to pursue a career in music and promptly dropped out of school, opting instead to move to Minneapolis and work on his songs full-time. At 19, he'd already attracted the attention of a major booking agency and begun receiving offers from record companies, but Jennings was more interested in a situation that would offer him creative freedom, not a fast influx of cash. Jennings soon retreated to his apartment and began working on his first album, which he recorded and scrapped four times before finally settling on a final track list.

Featuring just Jennings and his guitar, Mason Jennings was also produced and released solely by the artist himself. The album proved to be a potent calling card for Jennings; it received significant airplay on local radio stations, and the songwriter began playing a Thursday night residency at Minneapolis' 400 Bar, which soon won him a potent local fan base. Before long, Jennings began gigging with bassist Robert Skoro and drummer Chris Stock, and the Mason Jennings Band began work on their namesake's second album when Jennings contracted mononucleosis and was forced to take six months off from performing and recording. Following his recovery, Jennings opted to scrap the set of live favorites he'd begun to record and instead cut a set of new (and often strongly political) numbers for his second album, Birds Flying Away. More gigging followed, but drummer Chris Stock was unable to reconcile the rigors of touring with his personal life and amicably left the group, with Brazilian jazz musician Edgar Oliveira taking over the percussionist's spot.

Jennings' continued roadwork added to the enthusiasm of his fans and the positive press he received for his first two albums. For his third release, 2002's Century Spring, he finally found a proper record company to release his product (Architect Records) and signed a distribution deal with established East Coast indie label Bar/None Records, which also issued Use Your Voice in 2004. The next year, Jennings joined as the first artist on Modest Mouse frontman Isaac Brock's Epic imprint, Glacial Pace, which then released Boneclouds in 2006. His relationship with Glacial Pace soured, however, and Jennings made yet another jump -- this time to Jack Johnson's Brushfire Records -- for the release of 2008's In the Ever. He remained with the label for Blood of Man, which was recorded in a woodside studio and released in 2009. Two years later, he delivered the studio album Minnesota, featuring the single "Witches Dream." In 2013, Jennings returned with the Bo Ramsey-produced Always Been. ~ Mark Deming

I can barely listen to Mason Jennings, because I get so nostalgic about Minnesota and my first love. Beautiful music!

4 years ago

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brandonmlemon

That Jared guy is a perfect example of a over privileged 1st world punk who thinks his degree in worthlessness makes him an intellectual. A lot of the most brilliant minds the US has produced didn't fit into the left-brained square peg school system. I know from experience. Further more, one doesn't need to understand much to know our political system and our democracy is a joke and right/left paradigm is the punchline. Other than that, Jenning's the jam.

That Zuckerberg guy was crazy to drop out of Harvard too huh Jared!?!? That is one of the most baseless statements that I have ever heard. If I remember correctly, there were no political science courses in high school. I guess maybe dissecting the pig in Biology would have helped him form his political opinions huh!?!?

6 years ago

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gnarlypurps

if you think a highschool "education" makes you more capable of thinking politically, then my friend i think your the one who shouldn't be making these decisions.

Jared - I would not automatically judge someone by his education level. Bob Dylan dropped out of college after one year. You should really look deeper than music for guidance on political positions anyway.

Politics has nothing to do with education level... obviously! Just look at all the idiots we have in congress... (sigh)

6 years ago

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chiefalasia

I've heard a lot of foolish things before. Let's add that one to the list, shall we? Noted. The school system is as flawed as is the political system. It is not for one person alone to state the limitations of anothers opinion.

They can make political opinions, but they shouldn't have a lot of stock put into them.

6 years ago

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wmwoelmer

A high school dropout isn't capable of making political opinions?

6 years ago

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jared_b2004

Talented artist no doubt, but a high school dropout probably shouldn't sing about political topics. The other songs are mostly top-notch and reminiscence of Bob Dylan as others have stated. I'm adding a few to my playlist. Sing on man...

I am listening to Soldier Boy right now, Molly. I dig it. I like Mason more and more the more I hear his stuff. I started on that first self titled album and it's just gotten better and better. Bet he's great live, he's got personality.

Yeah, I love his music his lyrics and composition, etc... It's great. But his voice has an inexplicably annoying quality to. It's not bad in the technical sense... Just not my taste, the voice I mean

7 years ago

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crazy_tweety_girl

This popped up on my Damien Jurado station. Jennings has great lyrics, but his voice isn't nearly as nice to listen to as Damien Jurado's. I guess what I'm trying to say is he's a good writer, not a singer.

I've been following Mason for years now and it's been great to watch his style evolve and come round again. I've seen three of his shows in Seattle and got to hang out with him a bit before the show. He's such a great guy and it comes through in his music. Totally genuine.